
Rupert Seidl
Articles
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Sep 12, 2024 |
fis.tu-dresden.de | Xinying Zhou |Rupert Seidl |Werner Rammer |Franka Huth
Enhancing reforestation success through scale-adapted spatiotemporal coordination of natural and artificial regeneration: insights from simulation experiments with the iLand modelResearch output: Contribution to conferences › Presentation slides › Contributed › peer-review
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Aug 12, 2024 |
fis.tu-dresden.de | Sebastian Seibold |Tobias Richter |Lisa Geres |Rupert Seidl
Soundscapes and airborne laser scanning identify vegetation density and its interaction with elevation as main driver of bird diversity and community compositionResearch output: Contribution to journal › Research article › Contributed › peer-review
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Jul 11, 2024 |
nature.com | Rupert Seidl |David Lindenmayer |Christian Messier |Magnus Löf |Adam Felton
Resilience in production forests can be achieved through natural ecological processes or repeated intensive interventions. We caution that ‘coerced’ resilience derived from intense and repeated human inputs may exacerbate biodiversity loss, narrow the range of ecosystem services provided and limit general resilience (that is, the capacity of production forests to recover from unforeseen disturbances).
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Jun 4, 2024 |
nature.com | Rupert Seidl
AbstractCanopy openings are increasing in Europe’s forests, yet the contributions of anthropogenic and ecological agents of disturbance to this increase remain debated. Here we attribute the root cause of all stand-replacing canopy disturbances identified for Europe in the period 1986–2020 from Landsat data (417,000 km²), distinguishing between planned and unplanned canopy openings (i.e., disturbance by human land use versus by wind, bark beetles, and wildfire).
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May 8, 2024 |
sciencedirect.com | Judit Lecina-Diaz |Rupert Seidl
Inclusivity fosters better and more globally relevant science Promoting inclusivity in science, the meaningful and equitable incorporation of diverse perspectives drawn from multiple cultures and nations, is increasingly recognized as critical to addressing global change [1]. Inclusive science invites and welcomes individuals and groups, especially those who are marginalized, have fewer resources, or are more likely to be excluded, to participate and to feel equal and respected.
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